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tv   CBS This Morning Saturday  CBS  January 26, 2013 8:00am-10:00am EST

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good morning. i'm jim axelrod. >> and i'm rebecca jarvis and here are a few stories we'll be looking at on "cbs this morning saturday." a wrath of winter slams the nation from the midwest to the east as ice storm, snow freezing rain and sleet follow days of bitter cold. the dreamliner is fast becoming a boeing nightmare. investigators are stumped about the cause of fires on board, and there's no telling how long the planes will be grounded. a shocking rape case that
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has divided ohio towns closer to trial. two high school players are accused and a picture is online. and hook shot in the books for miami last night. >> the longest sky hool in american airlines arena. >> a computer technician wins $75,000 and a takedown from lebron james. >> from lebron just a moment ago. we'll show you. that and much more on "cbs this morning saturday," january 26th, 2013. captioning funded by cbs i don't know what's better the takedown by lebron or the $75,000. a good day for that guy. >> yeah. >> welcome to the weekend and welcome to you, jim axelrod. >> good to be here. >> a lot of people know jim from
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the "nightly news." he's in for anthony mason who's in davos. it's good to be here. i know it's god to have a chef in the house. he's going to continue to do that. we are going to get a taste of just why that is. >> i'm looking forward to your first dish, jim. that's going to be a good one. plus we have some good muff from a british singer. he's a trant plant. josh doyle will be producing here in studio 57. extreme weather, ice snowstormsnowtorms, snow, the midwest got hit. for millions of americans, the misery is far from over. terrell brown is here with more on that. terrell, the misery is just beginning for you this morning as you stand out there. good morning. >> reporter: it really is, rebecca. good morning to you.
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thank goodness for the long johns. we're talking about temperatures in the low teens and single digits in many places still this morning. that's on top of the snow and ice that moves through yesterday. and before it's all said and done, many residents are preparing for another winter blast tonight. across the northeast, midwest, and south friday the winter storm wreaks havoc on roads. snow on a high wrai in ohio caused this spinout. in tennessee police say a fire truck slid off the road while trying to help a state trooper that had slipped off in the same spot. the fire truck landed on top of the cruiser, killing 26-year veteran trooper michael slagle. a similar scene in kentucky as black ice caused the fire truck to flip on its side. three firefighters were sent to the hospital. and an icy interstate set off crash after crash, many involving tractor-trailers turning i-65 into a parking lot. the blast of wintry weather
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follows the frigid week across much of the country in some places, the coldest temperatures in years. temperatures have barely been able to get above freezing in new york for days. in new york city this is how a fire hydrant looked before firefighters arrived. it's even worse in parts of minnesota where it plummeted to 30 below zero. and in vermont, 20 below with even colder windchills. next door in new hampshire, a ski resort shut down because the windchill was expected to reach 48 degrees below zero but relief may be in sight. forecasters sa i the cold will let up this weekend before warmer temperatures set in early next week. and we may be talking about the 50s next week. i'm not going to know what do with myself. before that happens residents in the midwest are gearing up for round 2. a major significant ice storm is shaping up for tonight into
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tomorrow morning. >> my goodness. i've been getting e-mails from family in the midwest bracing for that. terrell, thanks for waking up with us. here's tracy ann gooden from new york with a first check of the weather. >> thank you so much rebecca. like terrell mentioned, we're tracking an ice storm going on in the midwest. we have activity in the four corners that we're going to talk about. the northeast people got some relief. although it was a snoozer, we had about an inch. it wasn't without problems. had a lot of traveling issues with temperatures that caused slickness on the roads. we're still getting that. we have that area still tracking well out to sea off to the northeast. but combining with the high pressure across the midwest, the two conflicting air masses is pulling down the frigid air and that's going to call for frigid conditions. look at that.
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high of zero from maine all the way north. look at the windchills. that says it all. back over to you jim. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. >> now jim back over to you. >> thanks. this week began with the nation's capitol celebrating as president obama was inaugurated for his second term. since then it's been all business for mr. obama who's moved quickly on a new set of priorities. cbs news senior white house correspondent has more on that. >> reporter: inaugural festives were barely over before they began to get down to the agenda of mr. obama's second term.
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>> make sure that my priorities are being carried out and my policies are consistent with the proms i made to the american people. >> he named dennis mcdonough as his new chief of staff. >> suddenly i'm feeling a lot of sympathy for the folks who sit down here. >> reporter: hearings like john kerry for is secretary of state way. they have more than a year before they begin the slide toward lame duck status so president obama is trying to move his agenda ahead as quickly as possible. >> to continue to have the economy recover, to create a stronger foundation for economic drought, and to continue his commitment on civil rights issueses like lgbt rights to take on tasks that require bipartisan support like day
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to talk about immigration reform and he'll take his case on the road next week in las vegas and to force the hand of congress which he fears will not act on his priorities, president obama will spend much of this coming year taking his case campaign style directly to the people. for "cbs this morning" saturday bill plante at the white house. let's take a closer look now at how the president is pressing ahead with his new agenda and how republicans are already reorganizing for the next election. jeff bellamy is with us. nice to have you in the studio with us goochld morning. >> good morning. >> there's a short opportunity for the president and there's a lot on his plate, gun control, climate control, and you have the immigration reforms he's put out there. does he risk losing on all fronts if he takes all of them at once? >> not to mention the economy. >> correct. >> the white house knows that constitutionally they have four years, but in reality they probably have one year. so a priority here is what they're trying to do. and immigration, as bill just
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sapiece, is going to be the top priority. and they believe they can operate on separate tracks here gun control on one track and climate change on a different track. they want to get something going at the beginning. if they don't do it in the first year, next year the new election season begins. >> this notion of operating on separate tracks it has been tried before and others have failed at doing so. what would make this administration different? >> in 2005 that's exactly what had gone on in the bush administration. he's been looking at that. he's been looking at the bush social security and privatization. they feel the republican party feels more compelled to act on here. they got their clocks cleaned among hispanic voters and other people, so they believe there's a reason to do immigration reform. >> let's talk a little more about this rebranding process. you were at the meeting of republicans this past week. in terms of getting their clock cleaned as you put it what will
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be done going forward as the party? >> there was one thing that struck me at the national committee meeting in charlotte this week. there wasn't so much finger pointing that we need to make changes. they're talking about bafbly following the model of the obama campaign and rebuild through social media and technology, but policies are the real problem here. so the republican leaders say it's a matter of tone. they're not going to exchange their principles but they know they have to be a little more in inclusive if they're going get voters. >> how do they do that that without the tea party? >> in the midterm year of 2014 like 2010, they're very worried about this. we're already seeing the potential of primary challenges from some senators so we'll see how that goes. but republican leaders say they're going to try to keep a tighter control on these primary challenges. we'll see if it works. >> jeff bellamy, thanks so much for joining us.
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>> thank you. tomorrow night on "60 minutes" president obama and hillary clinton join in an interview. it's the first time the president has done an interview with the secretary of state. >> why did you want to do this? >> i wanted to say thank you. it's been a great collaboration over the last four years. i'm going to miss her. wish she was sticking around. but she had logged in so many miles i can't begrudge her one take-it-easy for a little bit but i want the country to appreciate what an extraordinary role she's played during the course of my administration and a lot of the successes we've had internationally have been because of her hard work. >> a few years ago it would have been seen as impossible because
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we had that very hard cam pachbl but i had gone around the world on behalf of the president and our country, and one of the things that i say to people because i think it helps them understand. i say, look in politics and in democracy, sometimes you win elections, sometimes you lose elections. and i worked very hard but i lost and then president obama asked me to be secretary of state and i said yes. and why did he ask me and why did i say yes? because we both love our country. >> you can see all of that interview tomorrow night at 7:00 eastern time on "60 minutes" right here on cbs. while things appear to be looking up for the economy the s&p closed above 1500 on friday. that was the first time since december 2007, the start of the great recession. the dow, which topped 14,000 in october that year before tumbling to 6500 in 2009 closed just 268 points shy of its
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all-time high. ever since the 2008 financial collapse people have been asking when will things get better. well, the answer from the world economic forum is this year if washington doesn't make it worse. my co-anchor anthony mason isn't here with us because he's covering the meeting in davos, switzerland. good morning. >> reporter: hi, rebecca. it's warmer here than there. to get some perspective on that i talked to christine lagarde, the head of the international monetary fund who believes we're at a critical point in the recovery process. there seems to be an optimism here. >> yeah. >> reporter: it's better. >> yeah, it is better. there's no question about it. but there has to be momentum and it has to -- we have to keep up. >> reporter: so it's a fragile optimism. >> correct. >> reporter: in davos where the top international bankers,
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leaders, and politicians have convened this week for the forum, the mood is brighter than a year ago. but christine lagarde, the french-born head of the international monetary fund has been telling everyone who will listen that this is a pivotal moment. you said this is a make-or-break year for the global recovery. >> mm-hmm. >> reporter: what did you mean? >> what i meant by that all the reforms, all the decisions that have been announced, and for some, taken, have to materialize in 2013. >> reporter: or in. >> if they don't materialize, it means policy makers decision makers are stepping back going back and that is not business as usual. the fiscal cliff has been avoided but there are decisions that have to be made in the course of 2013 considering fiscal deficit concerning the debt ceiling chchlt is why 2013
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is a make-or-break. >> reporter: if those decisions are postponed again? >> it will be pushing the can down the road again and i don't think the u.s. should fall into that trap. >> reporter: economically if they do, what will be the effect? >>. >> if they do? i hope it's not addressed in the cards. i think it's leave uncertainty at the table and uncertainties are not good for confidence. lack of confidence does not facilitate investment and creation of jobs and so forth. and the u.s. is a huge economy. >> reporter: the imf forecasts the global economy will grow about 3.5% this year a good number, lagarde says but not a great one. we've avoided the chance she says. let's beware of a relapse. rebecca? thanks anthony. this lagarde, she's a pretty
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interesting person and has redefined the role of the imf, hasn't she? >> reporter: it's first time the imf has become kind of a rock star. she's trailed all over the media halls by cameras. she's pretty forthcoming. more ominous than a lot people. following her is a lot like following hillary clinton. in fact before talking with her, she said hillary clinton's dehydration problem was kind of wakeup call for her that maybe she needed to take it a little easier. >> interesting point. thoenlt, go get a hot cocoa, take in a ski or something, look beautiful s beautiful where you are. >> reporter: beautiful it definitely is. >> we'll look forward to seeing you next week. >> reporter: thanks bec. the jet line over the future is grounded why investigators try to figure out why its
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state-of-the-art batteries keep catching fire. let's get the latest from cbs travel editor peter greenberg. good morning, peter. >> good morning, jim. it's staggering to the boeings, airlines who have ordered the plane, 800 planes on order. the good news is they onto produced 50 of them. so there's some time to build and try to fix this problem. >> so specifically what is the faa doing right now? >> what they're doing is deacon strukting it and trying to figure out what lead to the overheating and fire. they're trying to do it more than with just one battery. they're trying to recreate it by injecting surges in the electrical input and also overheath because once that battery catches fire you have a problem. they're looking at the wiring bundles, how the wiring was installed, and then trying to recreate exactly what happened. >> this is a 200 million dollar
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plane. so clearly if there's 800 of them in if pipeline it's a big financial impact for boeing. but people are saying how is it allowed to fly in the first place? how did it get out there in the first place with passengers on it? >> this is the most outsourced plane in aviation history. so you've got two things working here. there's an internal view going on with the faa. the faa is doing this grounding order as an opportunity to look inside itself to figure out its own procedures. remember with that many subcontractors you miss one rivet, the plane can't be produced. that's why it was delayed in the first place. so this rush to production that's also what they're focusing on within the faa. >> peter, real quickly, even if they solve the problem, consumers are going to be calling and asking one question am i getting on a 787 after this is resolved. >> here's the thing.
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there have only been three aircraft types in our lifetime that have been grounded. the british-made comet. once it was grounded it never flu again. then the dc-10 in 1979 after that terrible crash in chicago. it really spelled the end of the dc-10 and it spelled the end of mcdonald douglas. believe it or not, they're absolutely laser focused on getting this problem fixed. the long process of bringing five accused al qaeda terrorists to trial for the 9/11 attacks resumes on monday. a new round of pretrial hearings will begin at the guantanamo bay in cuba. khalid sheikh mohammed. just yesterday the judge issued a ruling that could mean conspiracy charges against the five will be dropped but they still face nearly 3,000 counts
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of murder. it's nice to have you with us this morning. >> good morning. >> so we're hearing behind the scenes thisere's this in-fighting going on among prosecutors over the conspiracy charge. some want to pursue it. others don't. why is it so contentious when khalid sheikh mohammed has already admitted to being the mastermind of the 9/11 terror a attack attacks. >> the government wants to get its hands on any who were involved. they don't want to give up -- at least some people in the executive branch don't want to give up the possibility of prosecuting people either for conspiracy or in the case of mr. hom don, if you remember mr. bin laden's driver and his
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videographer. there's been fighting within both testify attorney of justice where attorney eric holder overruled the ruling by solicitor. and admiral mcdonald has overruled brigadier general mark martins, the widely respected chief prosecutor before the military commissions. it's drama playing out in realtime. it's very complicated. you have two parallel tracks. >> here we are more than 11 years after 9/11 and i guess folks are really wondering when if rrks we going to get to a trial. can you given us a sense of the time line here? >> well, let's see. this is 2013. i personally think it's a scandal that it's taken this long. and public confidence in the administration of justice has not been served. >> months? years? what are we talking about? >> i would be surprised if these
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trials were finished in 2013. i think they'll be finished in 2014 possibly even 2015 at this rate. but then of course there are appeals because the cases are subject to review by the court of military commission review and then by the u.s. court of appeals in the district of columbia circuit and then the spraem court. boy uld sa i this wholing at of cases, set of cases would have been over a long time ago if the cases backhand processed in the federal district courts. >> let's talk about torture. it's been talked about a lot. to you see that coming up and if so, in what parameters? >> i think the defense will try to get in evidence by whatever means they can that the accused have been subjected to torture. we're talking about waterboarding and other kinds of mistreatment. thing the government will make every effort to keep that off the public record.
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i think ultimately it's artificial to try to keep that off the public record. we may not like it what the cia and other people did in these cases, and i think it's quite important that that be made a matter of public record as well. >> eugene seidel thanks so much for joining us. >> my privilege. coming up jim and john harbaugh brothers and head coaches getting ready to face each other in the super bowl. later, overusing the internet to diagnose an illness can make you sick. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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the alleged rape of a teenaged girl by two football players in ohio has gone global. it is a polarizing story. we'll be speaking with the
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attorney for one of the individuals involved in that case. we'll also be speaking with jean casarez. we'll be right back. this is "cbs t
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this pedestrian bridge into a natural slip and slide. some of the people opted for the balanced approach. others hugged the rail. >> no ice-skates necessary. >> you've got to give it to one guy. he sat down on the job. it's a lot less risky. good for him. i might be the one sitting down too. i get nervous. >> no upside trying to get across when you're going to end up sitting down anyway. >> just enjoy. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm jim axelrod. >> and i'm rebecca jarvis. we want to get to the top story. it's a distressing one.
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it's rape case in ohio. it came to light when pictures were posted online. attorneys for two teens went to court friday asking to keep the case closed to the public. it's a case that's brought worldwide attention to 18,000 just west of pittsburgh. it revolves under two. they're accused of raping an unconscious 16-year-old girl at a party last august. a picture and video of other students talking about the incident placed blame on the accused. >> that's like rape. it is rape. >> did he do it? >> dude. >> they raped her. >> the accuser didn't remember the incident until graphic photos on the media nets surfaced. >> many outside are saying that
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big red football runs the town. >> the posts were quickly deleted and local officials were accused of covering up for the players. but the case was revived at the group anonymous found the original posting and said all students would be responsible. >> we'll not stand by. >> that set off a series of protests as people from across the country came to voice support for the jane doe. the trial is scheduled to begin february 13th. and with us now are walter madison, defense attorney for one of the accused, malik richmond and jean casarez for "insession" on truetrutv. jean is also an attorney. walter, you want the case moved out of steubenville. why is that so important? >> it's important because of the
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atmosphere. the community has been tainted. it's small community and i think it sets itself up for the intimidation that's occurred. we're not quite prepared to deal with this social media machine and force and witnesses are reluctant to come forward. what happens the effect for my client is he's being denied a fair trial. >> the other defendant in this case has his own representation. that representation has also pushed to make this an off off-the-record case where the press wouldn't be allowed to engage and hear the proceedings of the trial. is that something you agree with? >> actually they did not request it. that was my motion. i was the only party who had a motion before the court and i withdrew that yesterday. >> why? >> what i wanted to do was assure that witnesses felt comfortable in participating the process, and i thought that i could address that best through a change of venue versus closure of the proceedings because i
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tlink is some value to openness and the public and the world understanding exactly what's going on inside of the courtroom. >> gene, i want to talk to you a little bit about the cases that become high profile. when you oochz get such public involvement and scrutiny how does that interact with the trial in a courtroom. >> this is only going before a judge so you're not tainting a jury pool but thing a change of venue is warranted in this case. i think the amazing thing about this case and we're seeing it all over the country is the social media of the case and for both sides because of the social media, the videos that were made that's why charges were filed because the parents of the alleged vilk tim walked in to the police with youtube videos and texts and e-mails saying something has to be done here. on the other hand there is no documentation of the alleged crime. from what i understand there was but it was deleted.
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can it be retrieved? >> there's no physical evidence of out rape so it makes it challenging. >> walter, have you seen a case before where the social media interfaces with what's going on in such a crucial way? >> this is unprecedented and think it's an example of technology outpaycing the law. the law has the ability to protect itself and we requested early on we close the proceedings, but at this point the toothpaste is out of the tube so you can't change that at this point. what we can do is put forth an effort to make sure that the proceedings or in ted grit of it are protected. >> which races the question going forward. how do you have a case when social media and conversation online takes place everywhere around the world and globalizes something that could be very global. walter madison and jean casarez, thank you both for joining us. here's another check of the
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weather. >> thank yo so much jim. we're looking at a prettyive scene across much of the tri-state. you can see we have temperatures -- although it doesn't look like it. we have frigid temperatures working across much of the tri-state, especially if you are in the new york area. it definitely feels a lot colder than the 20s. . and some lake-effect snow that we're also coping with across much of upstate new york and pennsylvania. now lacking back further west high pressure in control across much of the nation's mid section. but we're tracking this section right here that's a cause for concern. that combined with energy further to our north and west that's going to produce some heavy amounts of snow in higher elevations, and also one to two inches of rain across much of the southwest. and, of course that's a look at your national forecast. now here's a closer look at the weather for your weekend.
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>> all right. make it a good weekend. rebecca, over to you. >> thank you so much. coming up next brother versus brother. this year's super bowl rivalry gets added meaning on the field. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." [ rosa ] i'm rosa and i quit smoking with chantix. when the doctor told me that i could smoke for the first week... i'm like...yeah, ok... little did i know that one week later i wasn't smoking. [ male announcer ] along with support, chantix is proven to help people quit smoking. it reduces the urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood hostility, agitation depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these stop taking chantix and call your doctor right away.
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prevacid 24 hour. there have been many sibling rivalries in sports but the one coming up on sunday is unique. super bowl xlvii in new orleans pits two brothers as the opposed head coaches. john harbaugh for the baltimore ravens and his younger brother jim for the san francisco 49ers. super bowl sunday will be the second time john and jim
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harbaugh will go head to head as head coaches. last season, the brothers met on thanksgiving night with their parents at the game. jack and jackie harbaugh say they don't play favorites. john put that to the test. >> our next question comes from john in baltimore. >> yeah question from baltimore. is it true that both of you like jim better than john? >> do not. >> is that john harbaugh? >> it's a situation that not even the father of super bowl quarterbacks peyton and eli manning ever had to deal with with his sons' matchups. >> he got a phone call. peyton's on the field, you're rooting for peyton. eli's on the field, you're
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rooting for eli. >> after they go home and they think about it they will come to this feeling like we were all able to work together and to be on the biggest stage in football. >> so it's tough for two guys, they know all about sibling rivalry. ronde from the tampa bay buccaneers joins us is tampa bay and his brother tiki for the giants and host of cbs radio. good morning, guys. let me start out by asking what's going on in the harbaughs' heads right now? >> it's a significant conflict of interest from a coaching standpoint. you want to see your brother successful but you're matching that against the all mat state in sport. you always want to win. jim played for a long time.
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was largely successful. we had this debate on the radio. jim has also had success. john has always had success but not in his own right. who do they want to win? we'll see. >> ronde, tiki here says they always want to see the other brother do well? >> unless they're playing against each other. >> you all played -- >> when i played tiki -- >> you played against eechl other five time -- each other four times? >> i think five times. i'll have to check this out. >> how did your mom feel tiki as you were competing against eechl other. >> she loved football and sports and she'd sit and watch. no one would talk to her. she didn't want us to get hurt. i would always say ronde was her favorite probably because he won one more and he's still playing the game but she was just
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proud, and think that's what the harbaugh family is going through right now. they're extraordinarily proud of their sons who have done so well for themselves. >> ronde you both were teammates at one point at the university of georgia and then you end up on opposite teams on opposite sides of the fields as pros. what's better? what's easier? >> you know what, thing it's a lot easier rooting for him as a teammate, but obviously when we were opponents, which, you know we were for ten years when he was with the giants and i was down here in tampa, you still look for his successes. i remember coming off the field after games on sunday and the first thing wants to see how he did. so as you talk about jim and john i'm sure they've been doing the same thing in their coaching careers. obviously jim was a successful player. john didn't play in the league. but you know they're rooting for each other. it will be interesting to see after the game you know what their handshake is like, is it a hug, the congratulations or if
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it's i'll get you next time. i don't know. i don't know how they're going to handle it, but it's great experience for sure. >> it's a win for family either way. but tiki in your case as twin there's an added layer here because owe're the same guy, but whoever wins makes a difference. >> you're right. we are identical twins and so we're kind of the same person. as ronde was alluding to it was fun because we could live each other's college lives vicarious vicariously through one another. when he won the super bowl in 2002, i couldn't have been more proud of him. i almost felt like i was a part of it as well. so i'm sure that's going to be a little bit different with the harbaughs but it's going to be about the same. i think it's going to be a big hug after the game no matter who wins. >> got to go unfortunately. got to leash it there. tiki and ronde barber, thanks. we appreciate it. >> you can watch the super bowl
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live one week from tomorrow right here on cbs. coming up next thanks to the internet a new twist on hypochondria. >> when i get scared think of parkinson's disease. >> not specifically parkinson's, but i'm not going to lie about my bouts with hypochondria. >> what's that? >> that's thinking that you have diseases that you don't really have. >> oh, my god. i have that. >> cyber krrkzchondriyberchondria. >> you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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need a bigger mouth! what imaginary disease do you think you have this time? >> i have the ya ba virus. >> you have a bad case of the i wish i was sick. >> i have ya ba. >> you have a headache and go online and figure out why. lots of us do it. i do it. in fact the pew research center says 59% of the adults who search the internet have searched for health.
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35% have gone online to figure out what medical condition they or someone else might have. the problem is some of us overdo it. some of us become obsessive about it and that's a condition experts call cyberchondria. there's actually a name for it. here to tell us more about it is dr. janet taylor. as always great to have you with us. >> thank you. >> it's kind of like if you're a hypochondriac and you have a computer, you're on the road to cyberchondria. >> we've all done it. most of us go on to find information to make us healthier. there are a few, almost 25% of people who go on with a vague pain, a vague symptom, go online and be convinced they're going to die tomorrow. >> the worst-case scenario. >> the worst-case scenario. >> the worst case is they self-diagnose themselves, look for self-treatment and they don't go in necessarily and see their doctor or go in and see their doctor too much and the fact is they don't have anything diagnosable. >> okay. so with all these potential
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places to go searching, there's got to be good siting and bad sites. what can you tell us? >> the key is to not stop searching. you want to look to see who's imagining the sight. institutions and governments. for instance mayoclinic.com or webmd.com or cbc.com. you want information that's current and evidence-based. and most importantly, you want information you can understand. so if you go on a site and it's hard for you to understand that'sthatwhat they're saying go on another site that's reputable and that you don't have to give a credit card or money. >> and talk to your doctor. >> nowadays it's a partnership with your doctor. i love when my patients say i found this online but you have to be willing to communicate with the doctor and have the
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doctor communicate with you because at the end of the day it's all about you. >> moving on with a few cyber con degree yaks what's the problem here? is it the chance that you're misdiagnoseing or the stress that ee created by look at smlg and thinking it's a lot worse than it is? >> it's a combination of both. the difference is how much anxiety you have how much you think about it. there's some people who are so convinced they have an illness, they stop going to work or having relationships. it's about acknowledging. if you're in doubt, check it out. talk to your health care provider. make an informed decision. don't just diagnose yourself online. >> dr. taylor thank you. >> a quarter of a senty later, the phantom still lurks in the opera. a great musical marks its 25th year on broadway. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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well today, the musical phantom of the on bra marks its 25th year on broadway. >> and we thought it a perfect opportunity to give you a taste right here on "cbs this morning saturday." this is hugh pa narrow singing "music of the night." snooet floating falling, sweet intoxication ♪ touch me trust me savor each sensation ♪ ♪ let the dream begin let your darkest side give in to the power of the music that i write ♪ ♪ the power of the music of the
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night ♪ (woman) 3 days of walking to give a breast cancer survivor a lifetime-- that's definitely a fair trade. whoo! you walk with friends, you meet new friends and you keep those friendships.
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it was such a beautiful experience. (woman) ♪ and it's beautiful ♪ ♪ undeniable ♪ (woman) why walk 60 miles in the boldest breast cancer event in history? because everyone deserves a lifetime. visit the3day.org to register or to request more information today. ♪ burning like a fire ♪ ♪ building up from deep inside ♪ it was 3 days of pure joy. susan g. komen's investments in early detection and treatment have helped reduce breast cancer mortality in the u.s. by 33% since 1990. help us continue serving the millions of women and men with breast cancer who still need us every day. register for the 3-day now. (woman) it's just been an amazing, amazing journey. i love these people. ♪ and it's beautiful ♪
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. and welcome to thmt saturday. i'm jim axelrod sitting in for anthony mason. >> and i'm rebecca jarvis. does climate change mean extreme weather is here to say? >> then the lives that bind. why so many americans including some very public figures tell lies and pay a heavy price. and a look into the near future. new technology that will change our lives in next five years. >> but first our top story in
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the next hour. the growing crisis in north africa. congress is asking for another $32 million to train troops to fight islamist extremists in mali. the u.s. is supporting french troops in mali trying to prevent them from forming safe havens. elizabeth palmer reports from mali. >> reporter: just how much support to give the mali operation has been a real bone of contention inside the administration however, it does look to step up its commission a notch. it's expect thad the military will begin in the air refueling french military planes over the weekend. the bombardment has continued where the militants have been most concentrated. on the ground french troops along with somalian and african
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countries are rolling north and local reports say they're retreating instead of digging in to fight, although the roads leading in to the conflict zone are closed to journalists, so it's hard to get exactly an idea how well the defensive is going. meanwhile in the central of the country thousands are crammed in with local families waiting to go home. we visited the school in the main city of the area and found the classes were overflowing, but still offering an education to the children whose families had to flee from the violent extremists who had taken over their homes in the last ten months. of course, even if this military effort does push the militants into the desert it's quite possible they'll come back as an insurgency insurgency, the kind of thing we saw in both afghanistan and iraq. for "cbs this morning saturday," i'm elizabeth palmer in central mali. the head of the u.s. anti-doping agency says lance
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armstrong continues to deceive the public. in an interview with scott pelley for tomorrow's "60 minutes" travis tygard -- tygart says armstrong lied during his interview with oprah. the u.s. anti-doping agency has given armstrong until february 6 to fully cooperate. armstrong's attorney says that is unlikely but he may talk to the international cycling youunion and the world anti-doping agency. you can see scott pelley's entire interview with travis tygart tomorrow night on "60 minutes" here on cbs. an attack on the ha sad regime is an attack on their ally. more than 60,000 people are said
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to have died in the syrian civil war that's now raged on for nearly two years. it is about four minutes after the hour. time now for a check of our weather with stacy ann gooden of news 12 network in new york. good morning, stacy. >> good morning to you, rebecca. i know a lot of folks in the northeast are expecting a some relief. guess what? you're going to get it. we're still dealing with bone-chilling temperatures for today but as we go through the remainder of the weekend into next week, temperatures are slowly warming up. there is some leaf there. we're also looking, however, at some action across the southwest. this is important because it's going to be dumping up to about a couple inches of rain and even snow in higher elevations especially across the colorado area and the higher terrain especially. that combined with the energy to our north and west that's going to bring in some freezing rain. speaking of which, there's an arctic chill over in the upper midwest region. as you can see it's highlighted in blue.
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so highs, teens, and plenty feeling much colder. of course, we'll have more coming up. that's a look at the national weather. here's a closer look at the weather for your weekend. >> announcer: this weather segment sponsored by tums. fights heartburn fast. >> all right. jim. over to you. all right. speaking of the weather. most scientists believe that climate change is partly to blame for the wild weather in 2012. one of the worst years on record in terms of lives lost and property destroyed. we had withering drought, vast
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wildfire tornados fierce summer heat, capped off by superstorm sandy and now this past week come blafts of record arctic cold. here's elaine quijano. >> reporter: it was dramatic. >> when you look outside, you say, the weather's on steroids. >> reporter: it was historic. >> government scientists said today that they're surprised by a jump in temperature that made 2012 the warmest year on record. >> reporter: the record of 2012 broke all sorts of records. first extreme heat gripped the midwest in march. >> 18 significant weather sights in the united states have set their all-time maximum temperatures. >> reporter: and that led to a summer of costly droughts for farmers and ranchers. then the west saw the third worst wildfire season. but those events were just a prelude to an autumn of superstorms. >> here's the latest on isaac.
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it became a category 1 hurricane today with winds of 80 miles an hour. >> reporter: hurricane isaac brought back memories of katrina for residents of louisiana. and then the storm of the century. sandy decimated the east coast. >> the risk for flooding here may be some of the greatest people i've sean in their lifetime. >> reporter: the extremes of 2012 put climate change front and center in washington this week. >> we will respond to the threat of climate change knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations. >> reporter: the scariest think of all is scientists say there is more to come. >> more wacky weather, more 100-year storms. get used to this. this is the new normal. >> for cbc this morning saturday elaine quijano, new york. jeffrey krueger is joining us. thanks for being here. >> thanks for having me. >> when we look back at the year
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that was, are we talking a new normal, this extreme climate stuff? >> certainly the last decade or so suggests that. of the top ten warming years on record, nine have been in the 2000s. and the one not in the 2000s is 1998. so this is all part of a cluster of years. the record-setting temperature months around the world have increased five-fold in the last 40 years. we're now having five record-setting months for every one we used to have before. and katrina-type events are turning out to be twice as likely as in other years. so there certainly seems to be a link. >> what kind of evidence are we seeing that what we're in the middle of right now is not just a cycle but that it is some sort of permanent shift? >> and this is something that comes up a lot. we must distinguish between weather and climate. and weather is the short term event, a day, a week a month, even a year. climate is these large sim mattic changes.
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keep in mind 40 years ago climatologists were telling us that the carbon were 280 parts per million. they warned us when we get to 350, we'll be in a heck of a lot of trouble. we're now in 394, and all of the dangers, all of the changes they had been predicting have happened on schedule. if your doctor told you 40 years ago that if you don't take certain precautions you were going to get sick in certain ways and certain sequences and it happened you'd say, she snu what she was talking about. >> if you don't take lipitor, your cholesterol is going to 500. >> that's right. >> the president talked about this in his inaugural address. i wonder when you have the rest of the world, japan's nuclear reactor went down because of the tsunami. now they're having to use more fossil fossil fuels. how much can the united states do if we were to bring things
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back, how much can we do to change the world picture? >> let's keep in mind a very important detail. we have about 3% of the world's population and yet we produce 24% to 25% of the carbon output. so we are the gorilla in the room if we're going to make a change. the things that the president was describing and has described in the first four years of his administration are the things that we know work. converting slowly if we have to to renewables winds, solar. for a while, nuclear and even shale glass can play a big part in this. the kinds of things the president has had to do to sort of sidestep a recalcy tranlt congress, raising fuel efficiency standards. it's a little bit like as you say, cholesterol. we know what the solutions are. we just have to be able to embrace them. >> are we likely to see with these fluctuations any further dispute among the scientific community that what we're dealing with is a result of global warming?
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>> well i think of the folks who are the climate deniers, the people who say the moon landings never happen. at some point the body of scientific knowledge becomes so overwhelming that if you're denying it you're sort of willfully excluding yourself from the big table where the conversations take place, and i do thing that that argument that this is a hoax has been demolished. >> jenffrey kluger thanks for being with us. >> the lies and the liar who tell them. if you don't want to get caught we'll tell you,000 stop. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday". just stop. stop the lies.
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as we heard earlier, there are new allegations that lance arm strong continues to lie when he talked to oprah winfrey about his history of doping. here's the truth about lying. if you lie a lot, if your lies are big enough or public enough you pay a heavy price eventually as we have seen time and time again. >> i did not have sexual relations with that woman. >> in the past few days i have begun to atone for my private failings. the remorse i feel will always
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be with me. >> i haven't told the truth, and i've done things i deeply regret. >> so the key to ending a lie is knowing how and when to stop and to come clean. jeffrey hancock is an associate professor of communication at cornell university. it's nice to have you with us. >> good morning, rebecca. >> we showed you a montage of people. some came right out and said i'm so sorry, i lied and thing got back to normal. we have these very public profile people lying. doesn't that just create a sense in society that everybody's lying and how can you really trust in anything anyone says and ultimately not say, well what's the difference if i lied? they're all lying. >> i have to admit it's been a crazy couple of weeks of lying. everybody's talking about these major cases of deception and it is -- it becomes a worry. people think everybody around me is lying and i can't trust anybody. but humanity and the way society is built is bit on trust.
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some will lie a little bit. on my way when i'm not. but the big lies are actually much more rare. when they get caught they throw a wrench in the way we think about each other. >> they're destructive to society as well as individuals. >> it showed decreased trust in communities and government. >> are all lies created equal? i mean is there a difference between saying to somebody who's on the phone with you, hey, i got to jump into a meeting because you don't want to talk to them. >> you never about never done that. >> no. and cheating on your taxes. are tlirhere grades? >> yeah there really are. the little ones are about protecting yourself and the other person. you're telling the other person lies because owe don't want to insult them. you don't want to tell them you were late and you were coming to see them. the others are for self-gain
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almost entirely. lance's lice in particular are unusual. they went on for years and years and years and it took down a lot of people. >> ted talk. i was walking it last night. it was terrific. >> it's terrific. you say you think lying is getting less less likely in our society. >> right. i think we often believe that once we're in online media, i can't see you. as soon as i can't see you, you're going to lie. but that's not really the case. people don't lie just willy nilly, they lie for a reason. in lance's case you can imagine it's for millions of dollars, it's for world adulation. just because we're not in the same space doesn't mean we're not going to lie more. it's for a situation. we're going to leave this record that we never left. there was no record. but if i were to write rebecca now, i'd actually give you a record of my lie and that's a very dangerous place to do lying. >> so in terms of e-mailing or any kind of texting, it's almost
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as though you're sort of being watched in your own mind and therefore you're less likely to lie? >> many times. if they get caught, they forgot about the fact that what they were doing is it leaves a record. they can trick themselves into saying, oh this won't last and they tell the lie. but if you look at almost any of the politicians that have been busted in a scandal in the last decade it's because of some digital media plays some central role. >> interesting conversation. that is not a lie. jeffrey hancock. appreciate it. >> up next touch it taste it, smell it. the next round of life-changing technology is on the way and sooner than you think. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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well, it's getting to the point where it's almost hard to remember what life was like without cell phones, computers, and the internet. in just 20 years or so these things have dramatically changed the way we live and more technology is quickly on the way. here to tell us what to expect in the next five years is dr. bernie myerson, ibm's vice president of innovation and an ibm fellow. good morning, dr. myerson. what have we got coming down the pike here? mind blowers? >> serious mind blowers. in the last 20 years things have gotten better. we have a lot more capacity on our cell phone and we got to the moon by apoll joe. you got there faster and
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cheaper. imagine making it so small you get down to atoms. literally the transistors that you make things out of are becoming atomic scale which means they stop working. you have to come up with a new idea. >> what is a new idea. >> something we called cognitive computing. we play jeopardy and we won handily. a little unfair because the human being has 21 watts going on in their head and we have 81 behind the screen. 20 watts versus 80,000. but that's a whole new type of architecture for computers. >> that architecture i'm told is going to have touch involved and all of a sudden through something like this you're going to be able to feel whatever it is you're looking at. >> precisely. the challenge is when you have cognitive, how does human work? you sense the environment. you pick up a coffee cup. yes, they will actually be the
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capability to mimic, feel. so if you're out on the web, you can literally feel the fabric you're going to purchase. >> you have computers becoming more sensory in the application. touch, scent. >> smell. i think about smell. it's not just that your morning coffee is great. smell is imagine for a minute you sneeze. well, there's all sorts of chemicals there. what if one of the things you could detect was staff infection. literally if you sneeze your cell phone says oh by the way, you want to hick the doctor because you're going to be unbelievably sick. >> you're going to die. no hopefully you won't go that far. taste, also one of the things you can do. >> exactly. you're familiar with pandora, thumbs up thumbs down. imagine having dinner and you have your device sensor sitting there and you smell what it smells. it will learn enough about the chemistry what it is to actually
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suggest it. >> you're running down the five senses here. let's keep moving along. hearing? >> hearing. imagine for a minute that literally everybody's phone could hear every imaginal sound. we're talking way up into the stratosphere where you can't and all the way to the base. let's say you track it to earthquakes. there's also been an understanding that manls somehow magically sense before an quick occurs. what if you could actually detect the rumbling and by collecting all the data predict 20, 0 minutes ahead of time prepare for it. it would be gaming-changing. >> you say a pixel will be worth a thousand words. this is incredible stuff. thanks so much for joining us, doctor. we appreciate it. >> my pleasure. still ahead, documentaries about two troeshlg figures. they're among the 100 or so films that are getting a lot of attention at the sundance festival. we'll tell you why. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday".
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an amazing feat last night between the heat and the pistons. take a look. >> with a half-court hooker. >> look at this shot. oh, my. he probably enjoyed the hug by lebron more than the money. look at the sky hook in american airlines arena history and maybe the greatest hug takedown. >> oh man. >> with a half-court hooker. >> the hug or the money, jim, that is the question. >> you got to go with the money. >> that half-court hook shot earned 50-year-old computer
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technician michael dresh $75,000. >> he goes down in history by become tackled on the court by one very excited lebron james, all 6'8" 270 pounds of him. drive said in all the times he practiced the shot he made maybe 1% of them. >> very nice. maybe your issue with the hug is that it's coming from lebron. i don't know. >> actually it's not the issue with the hug. it's the fact that i'd love the 75 grand. >> nice answer. welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm rebecca jarvis. >> and i'm jim axelrod. >> coming up a look at some of this year's best indies films from the sun festival. >> and chef dishes up some dishes and josh doyle performs live. >> first over to stacy ann goodman from station 12 in new york. >> thank you guys. thank you, rebecca. things are pretty intense across portions of the west. as you can see, we do have a lot
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going on. we still have some good news right? much needed relief eventually across the northeast. we dealering with lake-effect snow across the great lakes. milder air will be pumped in. we're talking 40s and 50s by next week. something to look forward to. however, we're tracking this area of low pressure that's going to be the culprit for freezing rain across the midwest. and that combined with the energy across the northwest taking a close look at that. we're talking travel troubles as well across the mid-atlantic states wef did get freezinging rain snow and, of course black ice. be careful out on the roads. that's a look at the national forecast. now here's a closer look at the weather for your weekend.
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now, it's time for your saturday shout-out, and it goes to west palm beach, florida, hosting the 101st annual south florida fair this weekend. now, it's fun for the whole family with all kinds of music from country and blue grass to jazz and steel bands. the america on ice show and the first ever elephant show and my favorite, the hambone express pig races. thanks to everyone for watching "cbs this morning saturday" on cbs 12 in west palm. over to you. rebecca? >> stacy ann, thanks so much. the 309 annual sundance festival ends tomorrow in south city utah after introduces the crop of the best and brightest independent filmmakers. >> this is the freedom to create and do and build as artists, as individuals. >> look. you're overreacting.
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even if you were developing this for freaks like us and i doubt you are, nobody wants to buy a computer. nobody. >> how would nobody know what they want if they've never even see seen it. >> true words. that's ashton cooper in "the late steve jobs." and with us is mike hogan, editor of "the huffington post." good morning. >> good morning. >> this steve jobs bio pick is getting a lot of attention. steve wozniak thought it wasn't exactly on point. >> this is one of the problems about making movies when they're still alive. it's easier to do lincoln. wozniak said this scene doesn't have anything do about anything. every never happen and doesn't capture the meaning of what our experience was like. it's a movie. we hear it all the time and it's true in this case.
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it premiered last night. the sundance closing film is not always the best film in the festival. this one very high profile and apparently ashton kutcher is pretty good at least. >> do you think he pulled it off? >> i'm hearing -- i got back from sundance a few days too early to see it but i hear people are pleasantly surprised about his performance but the film may be a bit too much of a film about how great steve jobs is instead of really exploring the complexities of his character. >> sundance is often where the american public first starts to hear about movies that then come out and become culturally relevant. what else are you hearing? what else are you hearing in terms of movie names in terms of sundance? >> there have been a lot of interesting films. i think of sun dabs in terms of the nfl draft. the players are the filmmakers who come there with movies. they're looking for a bigger audience. then the owners are the distributors looking for the next big thing.
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so there's everything from people who have never heard of to people who have done something and now they're going have a chance to do something bigger. so the guys who wrote "descendants," they came out and wrote "the way, way back" by steven carell. that's a movie that's definitely going to be coming to a theater near you. and there have been a number of pickups. it was a pretty good year. there were a lot of films that got bought not a lot of big money purchases. >> there are also a lot of historical references. anita hill. th dick cheney. >> documentaries were a big thing this year. there were a lot of big
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documentaries. anita is about anita hill her 1991 testimony liberals were not thrilled with this portrayal. they wanted him to be the anti-christ period but it's a damning portrait of cheney where he bent the truth for reasons he felt were correct and even ended up alienating president bush. that's one of the big things of the film. >> thank you so much. appreciate your time. >> thank you. up next the dish and the toast of memphis, chef wally joe with his ultimate five-roast spiced chicken. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." hi. john stamos. enchanté this is too good to be true. dannon oikos non-fat yogurt... delicious yet healthy. sounds too good to be true. there are things that are too good to be true... such as dannon oikos. thick, creamy, with 0% fat and twice the protein... of regular low-fat yogurt mmm
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it is more than 8,000 miles from hong kong to cleveland mississippi, but chef wally joe not only made that journey as a child. he went on to become a maestro of southern cooking. >> recognized as one of the country's best he's now the chef's general manager and partner in the acre restaurant. we're delighted to welcome chef wally joe to the dish. good morning. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> what are we having. >> this is a twist on a main
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chinese dish that we would normally have. it's a crispy chicken that we normally order but you dip it in five spices. this is -- usually deep-fried. so it's not practical to fry a whole chicken at home so what i've done is adapted this. rubbed the whole chicken with five-spice powder. >> what is it? >> five spices. pepper corns, very flavorful. how is that? >> it's fabulous. thank you. >> what are the challenges of combining this sort of southern -- these two heritages. you have sort of the asian influence and the deep south. so how do we marry those? >> well, i'm a chinese kid that grew up in the american south so it's really a reflection of who i am my heritage my upbringing where i grew up in the mississippi delta.
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so you have all these flavors that are in my memory and you grew up with and you kind of work with that kind of background. >> so that's not the most common story in the world, chinese people growing up in the deep south. how did you get to memphis? >> for no other reason my dad's brother was there. but as a matter of fact from the 1920s up until the mid-'80s there was actually a large contingency of chinese-americans there. there were a lot of us down there. >> what was the biggest surprise as a child going from hong kong to mississippi? >> you know when you're a kid you don't really notice those things. but you see people that look different from you. it was all chinese -- no. you step off a plane and you see people that don't look like you and you say, wow, this is different. >> now, you didn't start out as a chef. you actually had a career in banking and finance. >> yeah. i actually grew up in the
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restaurant. my family had a restaurant for 37 years, but i did everything i could to get away from it. >> did they push you to study economics? >> not at all. >> that was all you. >> yeah. >> just when you think you're out, it pulls you right back in. >> it pulls you right back in. >> tell me about that. what was the calculus in your head? >> well, i traveled a lot in college, always during breaks always hit the best restaurants in each area developed a love of great wines traveling through wine country and from there i was saying thing i want do this. i love this i love food, i love wine. i think i want do this. >> passion. >> yeah. >> speaking of great wines you brought a phenomenal one to share with us. we love on the dish to have every chef that comes through sign our dish. if you wouldn't mind doing that. >> oh. thank you so much. >> thank you so much. i'm tlimed to have you with us through this extraordinary meal. if you'd like more on chef wally
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joe and the dish head to wbs.com/cbsthismorning. coming up next a musical treat from one of the hottest new talents out of nashville josh doyle. you're watching "cbs this morning." when it comes to getting my family to eat breakfast i need all the help i can get. i tell them "come straight to the table." i say, "it's breakfast time, not playtime." "there's fruit, milk and i'm putting a little nutella on your whole-wheat toast." funny that last part gets through. [ male announcer ] serving nutella is quick and easy. its great taste comes from a unique combination of simple ingredients like hazelnuts, skim milk and a hint of cocoa. okay, plates in the sink, grab your backpacks -- [ male announcer ] nutella. breakfast never tasted this good. this cold season, nasal congestion won't slow me down. i made the clear choice. i'm getting claritin clear with claritin-d.
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he's one of the most talked about new talents in nashville, but he is a long way from home. josh doyle is british. he moved to this country after his former band broke up in 2001. >> and like many struggling artists, josh waited tables to make ends meet. and all the while in nashville, he was honing his skills and writing songs and it finally paid off. his self-titled debut album is actually the result of winning a contest, and that's a story in itself. now here's josh doyle with his first single from his cd, "solar
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storm." ♪ park the car in a vacant lot and lay beneath the collapsing stars ♪ ♪ afraid to say what wi was in my mind on the waterfront ♪ blood cells rushing to my brain check it out my acting strange ♪ can't even look you in the face this is not like me ♪ ♪ and i don't want you to know i don't want you to go ♪ ♪ i feel untied when i'm with you ♪ ♪ and i wanted to say that i want you to stay i feel alive just being with you ♪ ♪ like a solarstorm in the
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heavenlies a world war going on in me snoegts and you swallowed the light you swallowed the light and it drew me to you ♪ ♪ the moon is on fire the lunar seas ♪ ♪ a rival worlds in a sacred hush let the love you hold inside flow out to me ♪ ♪ i'm so tired of my own speech these frozen words at my command my heartbeat reaching unfire alarm speeds this is notes like me ♪ ♪ and i want you to know i don't want you to go ♪ ♪ i feel untied when i'm with you ♪ ♪ and i wanted to say that i want you to stay i feel inside just being with you ♪ ♪ like a solarstorm in the
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heavenlies ♪ ♪ a world war going on in me and you swallowed the light you swallowed the light ♪ ♪ and it drew me in ♪ ♪ oooooooo ooooooo ♪ >> josh doyle. thank you so much, josh. great to have you with us. that wasn't a beyonce, right? just making sure. >> no i was singing live. >> you were singing live. you won a contest. tell us about it. >> yeah the guitar center decided to pick out the best undiscovered singer/songwriter in america and an english guy won it so that's weird.
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17,000 people entered and i was the winner. >> congrats. >> yeah. and that song is on facebook for free right now for a like. >> it's so interesting to hear the british accent when we talk but when you sing you sound like alabama. >> that's what my mom said. she's from alabama. >> we'll be right back with josh doyle. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." sometimes what we suffer from is bigger than we think ... like the flu. with aches, fever and chills- the flu's a really big deal. so why treat it like it's a little cold? there's something that works differently than over-the-counter remedies. prescription tamiflu attacks the flu virus at its source. so don't wait. call your doctor right away. tamiflu is prescription medicine for treating the flu in adults and children one year and older whose flu symptoms started within the last two days. before taking tamiflu tell your doctor if you're pregnant, nursing. have serious health conditions, or take other medicines.
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if you develop an allergic reaction, a severe rash, or signs of unusual behavior stop taking tamiflu and call your doctor immediately. children and adolescents in particular may be at an increased risk of seizures, confusion or abnormal behavior. the most common side effects are mild to moderate nausea and vomiting. the flu comes on fast, so ask your doctor about tamiflu. prescription for flu. ♪ i -- i got it, i got it made ♪ ♪ i got it made, i got it made ♪ ♪ i got it made ♪ ♪ fresh at subway ♪ ♪ breakfast made the way i say ♪ [ male announcer ] at subway you got breakfast made. like an under 200 calorie steak egg white & cheese. subway. eat fresh. dare to leave your lipstick at home. new revlon colorstay ultimate suede™ lipstick gives you all-day color and instant moisture with shea butter and aloe. for food-proof wear and velvety soft lips.
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so here's norah o'donnell with a look what's happening mondayed on "cbs this morning." >> good morning. on monday, five things you need to know about hotel security. we'll show you why that room with a view could carry a risk. plus author t.d. jacques will be in studio 57. we'll see you monday at 7:00 on
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"cbs this morning." >> you don't want to miss that. then later this week "cbs this morning" will come to you from new orleans. that's the site of super bowl xlvii. we'll have special shows thursday and friday and saturday in the run-up to the big game. of course, that's on sunday february 3rd. it is the san francisco 49ers and the baltimore ravens in super bowl xlvii right here on cbs. >> looking forward to that. have a great weekend. >> it was great having you with us, jim. thanks so much for joining us. and here's more from josh doyle. this is meaning of life. ♪ you break out of school
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find a girl and we're gone ♪ blinded by dreams pl we follow the throng ♪ ♪ we work ourselves to death trying to find the significance trying to fill the voildd that haunts our existence ♪ but don't let it show we don't let 'em know ♪ ♪ all of my life i've been afraid of myself ♪ ♪ been putting on a mask for everyone else ♪ ♪ scared of the future scared 'cause i know i'm just a kid in grown-ups' clothes the meaning of life is to find your way home ♪ ♪ the kingdoms of man are paper thin and hole lowe ♪
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♪ the sex is showbiz and the love is shallow ♪
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